
Conceivably, Hamdi, if the government continues not to charge him with
any crime, will be released only when the open-ended war on terrorism
is over, if he lives that long. The president, on his sole authority,
put Hamdi in that prison. And unless Hamdi's court of last resort, the
Supreme Court, restores his basic constitutional rights as an American
citizen, he will stay behind bars. There will be an appeal to the Supreme
Court.
The Fourth Circuit's ruling has been hailed by John Ashcroft as "an
important victory for the president's ability to protect the American
people in times of war." Practically all the stories on Hamdi in
the media have gone along with the administration's assertion that Hamdi,
fighting with the Taliban, was captured on the battlefield in Afghanistan.
But is
this true? The Fourth Circuit accepted, without rebuttal from the prisoner,
who has not been allowed to appear in court, a two-page, nine-paragraph
affidavit from the government justifying its claim that Hamdi was captured
"in a zone of active combat" as an enemy combatant. This is
"undisputed," says the court. But look closely at this sentence
in the Fourth Circuit's opinion: "The factual averments in the
affidavit, if accurate, are sufficient to confirm that Hamdi's detention
conforms with a legitimate exercise of the war powers given to the executive.
. . . Asking the executive [the president] to provide more detailed
factual assertions would be to wade further into the conduct of war
than we consider appropriate and is unnecessary to a meaningful judicial
review of this question." (Emphasis added.)

" . . . Asking the executive [the president] to provide more detailed
factual assertions would be to wade further into the conduct of war
than we consider appropriate and is unnecessary to a meaningful judicial
review of this question."
According to the Bush administration, an American citizen can be held
indefinitely, incommunicado, on its say-so that the government's facts
are actually factual. This is due process? This is America? Yet the
Fourth Circuit stated in the same decision that stripping any citizen
of his or her constitutional protections "is not a step that any
court would casually take." Hamdi has not been allowed to be interviewed
by his lawyer so that the government can be cross-examined in court
on the credibility of its affidavit. In the January 9 Washington Post,
Stephen Dycus, an expert in national security law at the Vermont Law
School, said plainly and irrefutably that Hamdi is "not being given
the right to refute the charges against him." Dycus also made the
crucial point that "despite some lip service about the courts preserving
some role for themselves [in this case], the [Fourth Circuit] really
doesn't play that role." And, as Dycus emphasized, it is the president
who has "the last word" on whether the evidence against Hamdi
is to be believed.
Trust Bush. He's the commander in chief. But the Constitution explicitly
insists on the separation of powers. That's why we have the judiciary.
In the January 8-14 Voice, I reported that when Hamdi's case came before
Federal District Judge Robert Doumar, without Hamdi present, that judge˜after
reading the government's two-page affidavit from Michael Mobbs of the
Defense Department˜said, "I'm challenging everything in the Mobbs
declaration."
Judge Doumar continued: "A close inspection of the declaration reveals
that [it] never claims that Hamdi was fighting for the Taliban, nor that
he was a member of the Taliban. . . . Is there anything in the Mobbs declaration
that says Hamdi ever fired a weapon?
. . . Without access to the screening criteria actually used by the government
in its classification decision [declaring Hamdi an enemy combatant] this
Court is unable to determine whether the government has paid adequate
consideration to due process rights to which Hamdi is entitled."
(Emphasis added.)
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals wholly ignored Judge Doumar's entirely
legitimate constitutional scrutiny of the government's two pieces of paper
purportedly proving the necessity of depriving this American citizen of
his right to challenge the government's case against him. As Frank Dunham
says of his client, "Nobody knows what his version of the facts might
be."
Elisa Massimino, a director of the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights,
makes this critical point in the January 9 New York Times: "[The
Fourth Circuit] seems to be saying that it has no role whatsoever in overseeing
the administration's conduct of the war on terrorism.
That is particularly disturbing in the context of a potentially open-ended,
as-yet-undeclared war, the beginning and end of which is left solely to
the president's discretion."
In its report "A Year of Loss: Reexamining Civil Liberties Since
September 11," released in September 2002, the Lawyers Committee
for Human Rights declared that in addition to many lives and our sense
of invulnerability, "the United States has lost something essential
and defining: some of the cherished principles on which the country is
founded have been eroded or disregarded."
The Supreme Court is our court of last resort, as well as Hamdi's. While
the Fourth Circuit did not say that what happened to Hamdi could be inflicted
on an American citizen captured on American soil, constitutional law professor
David Cole notes, "There would be some in the government who would
claim that in this conflict the combat zone is the world." <<
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